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Download Chapter 9: Nuclear Chemistry
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Chapter 9 Notes 1 Chapter 25: Nuclear Chemistry I. Atomic Number, mass number and isotopes A. Atomic number: number of _________ in the _________. The atomic # determines which _____________ an atom is. B. Mass number: Sum of the ____________ and ___________ in the nucleus. This is also shown on the ___________________, but that number is an ______________, which is ________________ (can’t have a decimal of proton + neutron). Symbol: C. Isotopes: Atoms with the same ___________ # (__________), but different _________ numbers (# of _____________ is different). Named as: Element symbol – Mass Number (Uranium-238) There are about 1500 known isotopes of all the elements. Only about 264 of these are stable. The rest have unstable nuclei and are radioactive. These unstable nuclei will undergo radioactive decay in order to become stable. II. Radiation: Energy that is emitted from a ________ and travels through__________. Examples: ____________________________. Ionizing radiation has enough ________ to change atoms and molecules it strikes into ________. Includes _______________ ______________________. III. Radioactivity: The spontaneous emission of ____________ and (sometimes) particles from the ______________ of an unstable atom. Emissions from such nuclei can be one of three types: Chapter 9 Notes 2 A. Alpha ( ) emission: particles that consist of _____________ and ______________ (like a _________ atom without the electrons.) ________________ charged. Emitted at about _________the speed of light. _____________, but the ____________ penetrating. Symbol: B. Beta ( ) emission” particles that are _____________ emitted at _________ the speed of light. _______________ charged. ________ penetrating than alpha particles. There are also ______ particles (_______________) that are identical to electrons but have a ____ charge. Symbols: C. Gamma ( ) emission: Pure _____________________ energy; more energetic than _____________. Travels at the speed of light. Has no _________ or _________. The most penetrating. IV. Nuclear Equations A. In nuclear equations, the sum of the ___________________ on the left side of the arrow must equal the sum of the _________________ on the right. Same rules apply to the atomic numbers. B. Example: decay of U-238 C. Example: decay of Mg-27 (both positron and electron) D. Sometimes _______ is lost and turned into _________(conflicts with the Law of conservation of mass) 1. Einstein’s equation: Where E = m= c= Chapter 9 Notes 3 2. Example: Example: How much energy (in KJ) is released when 1 mole of oxygen-14 decays by β+ (positron) emission to form nitrogen-14? The masses are: oxygen-14 = 14.0086 g β+ (positron) = 0.0005 g nitrogen-14 = 14.0031 g V. Half Life ( ) A. The amount of time it takes for _________ of a sample of a radioactive nuclide to ___________. A half life can be a fraction of a second or thousands of years, depending on which nuclide is decaying. As each half life passes, the amount of nuclide remaining undecayed decreases by ______________. The half-life for carbon is ___________ years. B. To determine how much of a nuclide remains undecayed after a certain number ( ) of half-lives has passes: C. Example problem: Fluorine-21 has a half-life of approximately 5 seconds. What fraction of the original nuclei would remain after 1 minute? If you began with 21 grams, how many grams would remain? VI. Fission and Fusion A. Nuclear fission: “_________________________” Certain nuclei will break into __________________________, which releases large amounts of __________. The energy is due to the “_____________”, or the tiny amount of ________ that has been converted to energy. Calculated with __________. Chapter 9 Notes 4 *A tiny amount of mass converted to energy will result in a very large amount of energy. The atomic bomb utilized an uncontrolled fission chain reaction. Modern nuclear reactors (like the San Onofre plant) a controlled chain reaction as a source of heat to generate steam to turn turbines to generate electricity. 1. Chain Reactions a. The continuous bombardment of the same radioactive isotope with ___________. b. The unstable nucleus that absorbed the neutrons _________, forming ___ nuclei and the emission of more___________. 2. Size does matter. a. Sometimes the neutrons will not be absorbed by the material because of the ___________________ of the nucleus. b. The probability of hitting the nucleus is ____________ as the size of the nucleus ____________. The smallest size the nucleus can be to keep the chain reaction going is called the ____________________. The accident at Chernobyl was a result of a runaway fission reaction. c. Chernobyl: B. Nuclear Fusion: Energy is released as small nuclei ____________ _______________ to form a ________________ nuclei. C. In stars, including our _______, ____________ is converted to ____________. Reaction: